Welding has been a job hotspot for a while now, and itâs only been getting hotter. Thatâs showing up at WyoTech, where its 9-month program with 58 welding seats already has a waiting list that stretches to next April.Â
âThat includes a night class, where students are going from 4:30 p.m. until about 2 a.m. in the morning,â WyoTech President Kyle Morris told Cowboy State Daily. âThatâs almost completely booked out.â
Weldingâs not the only hot trade program at WyoTech thatâs been filling up fast lately. The outsized demand for WyoTechâs career and technical programs is fueling yet another huge expansion at the trade school, which just added 90,000 square feet in 2022.Â
The latest expansion will add 137,000 square feet to the existing 300,000-square-foot facility, at a cost of $42.8 million, making room for more welding classes, as well as more space for advanced diesel, heavy diesel, and the trim and upholstery program. Wyomingâs State Land and Investment Board has approved a $5 million Business Ready Community Grant and a $5 million loan to support the project.
There just doesnât seem to be any end in sight for how big WyoTech, which is headquartered in Laramie, can get â but the latest growth spurt is all about what the school is seeing from the marketplace.Â
âThe demand for the trades both from a student perspective and from an employment perspective is very large right now,â Morris told Cowboy State Daily. âWe know that from a kind of state of the country perspective right now, but we also see it firsthand.â
That doesnât only include the lengthening wait lists for career programs at WyoTech, but itâs also the way employers are flocking to fill up the schoolâs quarterly job fairs.
âWe have space for about 100 employers at those and they are being filled up in a day, to basically over capacity,â Morris said. âSo, our industry partnerships are showing us that demand is super strong.â
The new facility will add space for between 400 to 700 more students, bringing the new total to about 1,800 enrollments at any one time.
Welding programs, in particular, will gain a whopping 142 new seats, bringing that program space from 58 students to 200.
Comeback Time
WyoTech has made a huge comeback in recent years after almost having to shut its doors. The comeback is thanks to one of its former students, Jim Mathis, who worked his way up to becoming an administrator at the school before it had been sold off to a new company.
Mathis didnât particularly like the new company, so he quit and made a career of turning around struggling career and technical schools.Â
That positioned him well for what came next â turning his old alma mater around and saving it from the brink of oblivion.
Mathis bought the school back in 2018. He felt like he had one more turnaround left in him before retirement, and because of the role the school had once played in turning his own life around, he knew that his last effort had to be WyoTech.
âI hated high school,â Mathis has told Cowboy State Daily in past interviews. âWyoTech changed my life because of how they did it. I needed the structure. I needed good teachers with high standards and principals telling me, âNo Jim, youâre not going to do that. You have to be here at 7 oâclock in the morning, or youâre going to flunk out.ââ
The Wyoming Legislature helped Mathis with a $5 million loan, leaving Mathis to raise the remaining $7 million he needed on top of that.Â
At the time, Mathis recalled walking into a ghost school that was only a shadow of what it had been. At peak, Mathis recalled the school having almost 2,200 students. But the day Mathis walked back through the doors, there were just 12 students and 12 employees left.
âIt was like a baby and a battleship,â Mathis said. âI mean there was nobody around. I thought, âThis is crazy. Iâve never had anything that small.ââ
Mathis spent millions on marketing, changing the schoolâs story around from near catastrophe to new success. Within two years, the school had returned to profitability, and the state loan was well on its way to being completely paid off.
Growth Spurt
WyoTechâs latest expansion isnât the end of the schoolâs growth spurt, Morris told Cowboy State Daily.Â
âOur goal is definitely to continue expanding, to continue growing,â he said. âOur vision at WyoTech is just three simple things. Best training, best experience, best outcomes. And so long as we can maintain those things and the demand is out there, we want to grow to fill that demand and provide good training and good costumes for these students.â
WyoTech already has plenty of growing room, Morris added.
âThe location where this building is being designed is on 70 acres thatâs directly across from our current training facilities,â he said. âSo weâve got a master plan that continues that growth and expansion. Weâll need some housing over there eventually, to continue expanding out our current programs.â
WyoTech has already gained national prominence and brings in many students from across America.
âOnly 7% of our students are coming from the state of Wyoming,â Morris said. âSo we plan to continue that reach.â
Ashley Chitwood, marketing director at WyoTech, said the schoolâs overall vision is to be Americaâs destination trade school in Laramie, Wyoming.Â
âWeâre telling America that this is the new form of education,â she said. âItâs quick training, itâs focused training. And weâre offering student life. We have housing so that we can still offer a form of a college experience in a way thatâs financially responsible to those who are attending our program.â
The employer partnerships at WyoTech, likewise, come from all over the United States and include some of the best that industry has to offer. It includes companies like Halliburton, Penske, Toyota, Duncan Aviation, and many others.Â
These are companies that donât think twice about landing a private jet that can fly WyoTech students back for a day trip to tour their companies, before flying them back home the same day in time for dinner that night.Â
The companies have also donated substantial amounts of equipment back to WyoTech, to help develop the hands-on trade programs. In fact, some companies have even built entire programs around sponsoring children of their employees to attend WyoTech.Â
All of thatâs helping to build a nationally prominent resource in Wyoming thatâs still on a big growth curve. One that can also help play a role in developing a young workforce that in some cases may choose to stay in the Cowboy State.
âWe want to position ourselves as Americaâs destination trade school, and we want WyoTech to be, we want people to see Laramie, Wyoming, and WyoTech, as the next wave of how education should go in this country,â she said. âAnd thatâs what weâre going to keep working toward is that vision of being the best.â
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Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.














